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  • Purple cloudscape, 1991
    1991 purple clouds 1.tif
  • Clouds over a bamboo fence in San Marcos la Laguna, Sololá, Guatemala.
    20090721 san marcos bamboo clouds 00...TIF
  • Clouds over a bamboo fence in San Marcos la Laguna, Sololá, Guatemala.
    20090721 san marcos bamboo clouds 00...TIF
  • Children play around rocks where 52 people were killed and six others went missing in five minutes on October 5 when a landslide tore through the village, leaving many boulders in its wake. Townspeople said no one from governmental or non-governmental agencies has visited the town since the disaster. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102605piedragrande03a.jpg
  • A Mayan mother and child walk on a path where two houses were destroyed and others damaged by landslides. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102505almolonga2.jpg
  • A family hunts for shrimp in the Chiguate River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the river, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco5.jpg
  • Jorge Mario looks over an area that mudslides destroyed earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Mario said about 500 people and 100 houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours. Mario is now the sole occupant and guard of the town's municipal building and says he can no longer smell the odor of decomposition that hangs in the area.<br />
    102305panabaj1.jpg
  • Carolina de Rosales enters her family's home, damaged by about four feet of mud, to check on its soiled contents. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, which sits near Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango5.jpg
  • Household items from a destroyed wooden home sit in drying mud. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, near prosperous Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango2.jpg
  • Lightning strikes near Fuego and Acatenango volcanoes near Antigua, Guatemala at sunset.
    20181212 drone fuego sunset lightnin...tif
  • A boy catches shrimp for fun in a hole left weeks earlier by the Chiguate River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the river, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco4.jpg
  • A boy catches shrimp for fun in a hole left weeks earlier by the Chiguate River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the river, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco3.jpg
  • A boy catches shrimp for fun in the Chiguate River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the river, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco2.jpg
  • Diverted traffic makes its way through a rural, coastal area. Traffic was stymied on a major coastal route for weeks until road crews could construct a makeshift road in place of one that was washed out when the swollen river overran its banks, altered the area's landscape and destroyed several houses in early October. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Many areas have been cut off due to washed out roads and bridges.<br />
    102705malacatan2.jpg
  • Cars and people line up to cross a bridge over a river. Traffic was stymied here for weeks until road crews could construct a makeshift road in place of one that was washed out when the swollen river overran its banks and altered this area's landscape in early October. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Many areas have been cut off due to washed out roads and bridges.<br />
    102705malacatan.jpg
  • Luz de Maria Fuentes Vazques lost her son when 52 people were killed and six others went missing in five minutes on October 5 when a landslide tore through the village, leaving many boulders in its wake. Townspeople said no one from governmental or non-governmental agencies has visited the town since the disaster. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102605piedragrande05.jpg
  • Villagers walk by rocks in the small Mayan town where 52 people were killed and six others went missing in five minutes on October 5 when a landslide tore through the village, leaving many boulders in its wake. Townspeople said no one from governmental or non-governmental agencies has visited the town since the disaster. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102605piedragrande04.jpg
  • Sirilo José Pérez Fuentes walks among boulders from a landslide that killed his son and destroyed his house on October 5. Fifty-two people were killed and six others went missing in five minutes during the Piedra Grande landslide. Townspeople said no one from governmental or non-governmental agencies has visited the town since the disaster. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102605piedragrande02.jpg
  • People look over an area where a landslide took out a bridge over the Samala River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America earlier in the month, killing hundreds of people, ruining homes and crops and making transportation difficult in western Guatemala.<br />
    102505road_damage.jpg
  • Residents and other workers construct buildings to house residents displaced by mudslides that occured earlier in the month when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. About 25 homes and several fields of crops in Tzanchaj were lost in the mudslide. The workers will build enough housing and common work, cooking and cleaning areas for 300 families.
    tzanchaj2.jpg
  • Residents and other workers construct buildings to house residents displaced by mudslides that occured earlier in the month when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. About 25 homes and several fields of crops  in Tzanchaj were lost in the mudslide. The workers will build enough housing and common work, cooking and cleaning areas for 300 families.
    tzanchaj3.jpg
  • Residents and other workers construct buildings to house residents displaced by mudslides that occured earlier in the month when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. About 25 homes and several fields of crops  in Tzanchaj were lost in the mudslide. The workers will build enough housing and common work, cooking and cleaning areas for 300 families.
    tzanchaj1.jpg
  • Mayan women fill containers with purified water from agency-provided tanks. Hundreds of residents of Panabaj, a small Mayan town destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America, are living in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan.
    102405santiago5.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with one of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say hundreds of victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago4.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with one of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say hundreds of victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago3.jpg
  • A family walks on a river bed that was created during torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan earlier in the month. Locals said the river used to be about 45 feet wide by 10 feet deep. The path it carved now spans hundreds of feet wide. The Lake Atitlán area was hit hard by mudslides and torrential rains, including the destruction of the town of Panabaj on the opposite side of the lake.<br />
    102305panajachel1.jpg
  • Magdalena, a Mayan woman, stands where her home is buried in mud. Mudslides destroyed the town earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the town by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj2.jpg
  • A once-for-sale car sits stuck in mud. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, near prosperous Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango4.jpg
  • Aerial drone image of lightning behind Volcán de Fuego and Volcán de Acatenango (left and right peaks in the distance) at sunset, seen from above Antigua Guatemala, on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2018. While Acatenango is dormant, Fuego is highly active and an eruption on June 3, 2018 caused heavy loss of life and property.
    20180918 drone fuego sunset antigua-...tif
  • Santos Gonzalez builds a new bridge to replace one washed away by the Chiguate River earlier in the month. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the Chiguate River, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco7.jpg
  • Santos Gonzalez builds a new bridge to replace one washed away by the Chiguate River earlier in the month. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the Chiguate River, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco6.jpg
  • A boy catches shrimp for fun in the Chiguate River. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding, mudslides and death across western Guatemala. Contamination from mud and chemicals from upstream killed the large fish in the river, locals said, and shrimp are the only food source in it now.<br />
    102805botonblanco1.jpg
  • A girls picks her way among rocks in Piedra Grande, a small village near San Marcos, Guatemala, where 52 people were killed and six others went missing in five minutes on October 5 when a landslide tore through the village, leaving many boulders in its wake. Townspeople said no one from governmental or non-governmental agencies has visited the town since the disaster. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102605piedragrande01.jpg
  • Cristobal Zapil works his onion field. While Zapil's wall around his crops saved them when a nearby river flooded on October 5, many other subsistence farmers in Zunil, a Mayan town in western Guatemala, lost fields and crops to mudslides and floods that occured when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America.<br />
    102505zunil3.jpg
  • Jorge Quiej Sop works to recover his onion field from feet of mud. Many subsistence farmers in Zunil, a Mayan town in western Guatemala, lost fields and crops to mudslides and floods that occured around October 5 when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America.<br />
    102505zunil1a.jpg
  • Mayan women walk on a path where two houses were destroyed and others damaged by landslides. Torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America in early October, causing flooding and mudslides across western Guatemala.<br />
    102505almolonga1.jpg
  • Residents and other workers construct buildings to house residents displaced by mudslides that occured earlier in the month when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. About 25 homes and several fields of crops  in Tzamchaj were lost in the mudslide. The workers will build enough housing and common work, cooking and cleaning areas for 300 families.<br />
    tzanchaj4.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with two of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say many victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago2.jpg
  • Maria Ramirez Ramirez, center, and members of five families from Panabaj in their shared room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. Hundreds of residents of Panabaj, a small Mayan town destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America, are living in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Ramirez said governmental and non-governmental agencies have provided some help to the displaced people, but she complains that prescriptions for medicine written by the agencies are useless, since many of the prescribed medications are not available in local pharmacies.
    102405santiago1.jpg
  • Lime powder, thrown about to help fight the spread of disease, covers the ground in an area where people died in mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj6.jpg
  • Footsteps in an area that mudslides destroyed earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj5.jpg
  • A family walks over an area that mudslides destroyed earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj4.jpg
  • A Mayan couple picks its way through an area that mudslides destroyed earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj3.jpg
  • Carolina de Rosales pauses while checking on the soiled contents of her family's home, damaged by mudslides about two weeks prior. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, which sits near Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October<br />
    102105jocotenango8.jpg
  • Carolina de Rosales checks on the soiled contents of her family's home, damaged by mudslides about two weeks prior. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, which sits near Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango7.jpg
  • Carolina de Rosales checks on the soiled contents of her family's home, damaged by mudslides about two weeks prior. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, which sits near Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango6.jpg
  • Household items from a destroyed wooden home sit in drying mud. In early October a nearby river sent torrents of water and mud through the town, near prosperous Antigua, and destroyed several homes after rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango3.jpg
  • Jorge Quiej Sop works to recover his onion field from feet of mud. Many subsistence farmers in Zunil, a Mayan town in western Guatemala, lost fields and crops to mudslides and floods that occured around October 5 when torrential rains associated with Hurricane Stan inundated parts of Central America.<br />
    102505zunil2.jpg
  • Erick Rosales shovels sand and mud in Jocotenango, Sacatapequez, Guatemala on Friday, Oct. 21, 2005 that collected after a nearby river flooded in early October during heavy rains associated with Hurricane Stan, sending water and mud several feet high through Jocotenango and destroying several homes, including that of Rosales and his family. Rosales, a former Los Angeles, Calif. gang member who returned to Guatemala two years ago to escape gang life, said he will try to sell the sand to road builders in order to make a meager living. Torrential rains and mudslides killed or made missing thousands of Guatemalans in early October.<br />
    102105jocotenango1.jpg
  • The peloton rides through a rain storm during Stage 5 of the Ford Tour de Georgia. Tom Danielson, of the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team, won the 94.5-mile (152.1-km) stage from Blairsville to the top of Brasstown Bald, the highest point in the state.<br />
    2006TDG060.jpg
  • David Zabriskie (left) of Team CSC, and Justin England, of Toyota-United Pro, ride with the peoloton through rain storms during Stage 5 of the Ford Tour de Georgia. Tom Danielson, of the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team, won the 94.5-mile (152.1-km) stage from Blairsville to the top of Brasstown Bald, the highest point in the state. Zabriskie finished 13th and England finished 9th.<br />
    2006TDG059.jpg